When Alec Guinness won his Oscar for the role as Colonel Nicholson in the
film Bridge on the River Kwai nothing could have been further from his
mind than the feelings of the real life colonel who, as prisoner of the
Japanese in the second world war, was forced to build a bridge over a major
river in order to help the Japanese supply route from Thailand to Burma.
After all, the role was entirely fictional. It was based on a film which
itself was based on a novel by a then little known French writer called
Pierre Boulle.

What few knew and fewer still understood was that the story of the Bridge
on the River Kwai was loosely based on a notorious episode in the Second
World War. The irony was that whereas in the film Colonel Nicholson had
had to help the Japanese to build their bridge, in reality the Japanese
were skilled engineers and the main role of the real life colonel, Phil
Toosey, was to ensure that the men under his command suffered as little
as possible at the hands of their unforgiving captors.

Toosey was a merchant banker in civilian life but had been an active officer
in the Territorial Army since 1925. When he was caught up in Singapore,
the worst military defeat in British history, he refused to take the easy
way out and be evacuated to India but chose to remain with his men. His
story is one of bloody-minded determination not to give up in the face of
an implacable enemy.

“...seldom have I been so impressed and moved by a story.
It is the telling that gives him the justice and
understanding that he so richly deserves.”

Sir Peter de la Billiere

“It is difficult to quantify what makes a good biography.
All I know is that, for me, The Colonel of Tamarkan,
by Julie Summers is exceptional. It is well researched,
brilliantly written and has insights about its subject,
Philip Toosey, that go far beyond most military biographies.
I’d even go as far as to say that only Julie Summers could have written it..”

Mary Zacaroli,
Oxford Times

“A gripping narrative and at the same time a highly sympathetic
insight into life in the prison camps and then the post war strains
of adjustment.”

Correspondent

“This outstanding biography is a necessary corrective to
the altered and incomplete character portrayed by Alec Guinness
in the film. Julie Summers describes in enthralling detail
the life of a man who served the Far Eastern prisoners of
war right up until his death in 1975,
and whose conduct marked him out as a true British hero.”